Study finds women are better at parking

The verdict is in, at least in the United Kingdom: Women are better parkers than men. A parking lot company in the U.K. called National Car Parks conducted a month long study in which it evaluated how men and women park. The group covertly studied 2,500 drivers in parking lots and built what it calls a "parking coefficient" to measure things like technique, accuracy and time taken to find a spot and park in it.

Out of a maximum score of 20, the study found that women have a parking coefficient of 13.4; men came in at 12.3. The study found that men were beset by behavioral setbacks like missing parking spots due to driving too fast through the lot. Women scored better at following speed limits (92 percent of them did versus just 64 percent of men) and taking time to find the correct approach angle to a parking spot (77 percent women, 53 percent men).

However, men were better in a few areas like being able to pull into a position and park after the first try: Only 29 percent of men in the group repositioned their car for another try, while 56 percent of women needed multiple shots to get the final position.

This explains why men have problems parking in the center of the space. In the study, 53 percent of women parked centrally on their first attempt compared to 25 percent for men.

"Parking is our business, so we carried out the research to see how well people park their cars. As an interesting byproduct of the research, we've also found out that there's a difference in parking skills between the sexes, although perhaps not the way most people expected," Jo Cooper, NCP's female chief executive, said in a press release.

National Car Parks is the U.K.'s largest private parking lot company. It operates lots in more than 700 locations and has over 200,000 parking spots.